Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine expected me to stay home and handle all of the kid and house stuff.....while still making 6 figures. Not sure how that works. But when I was SAHM, he resented that I didn’t make money. When I worked, he resented that it infringed on his career.
I think males in our society are raised to be entitled, while females are raised to sacrifice for others. They’re deep seated cultural beliefs that most people don’t even realize they have.
I see it even among SAH parents - SAHMs do way more for their kids, while the SAHDs I see are focused on themselves and ignore their kids, play on their phone, etc.
I think you are on to something, and it starts very early.
Yep. That’s why you should marry a man whose mom worked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine expected me to stay home and handle all of the kid and house stuff.....while still making 6 figures. Not sure how that works. But when I was SAHM, he resented that I didn’t make money. When I worked, he resented that it infringed on his career.
I think males in our society are raised to be entitled, while females are raised to sacrifice for others. They’re deep seated cultural beliefs that most people don’t even realize they have.
I see it even among SAH parents - SAHMs do way more for their kids, while the SAHDs I see are focused on themselves and ignore their kids, play on their phone, etc.
Bingo. As a woman you have to actively push back against this norm. It's hard. I did not succeed in doing it. I hope my daughters will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine expected me to stay home and handle all of the kid and house stuff.....while still making 6 figures. Not sure how that works. But when I was SAHM, he resented that I didn’t make money. When I worked, he resented that it infringed on his career.
I think males in our society are raised to be entitled, while females are raised to sacrifice for others. They’re deep seated cultural beliefs that most people don’t even realize they have.
I see it even among SAH parents - SAHMs do way more for their kids, while the SAHDs I see are focused on themselves and ignore their kids, play on their phone, etc.
I think you are on to something, and it starts very early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ it shows the type of relationship kids SHOULD see. Not the dysfunctional mom at home and dad not doing anything at home that some Neanderthal men want to perpetuate for ego sake.
Oh please. You don't criticise my division of labor and I'll shut up about yours.
I happen to like being a sahm. So sue me.
Anonymous wrote:Reading threads like this is always so eye opening to me. I never think my husband is so unusual but reading threads like this tells me is. For a man, he’s very nurturing and is aware of what the kids need and when they need it: food, new clothing, comfort, doctors appointments, etc.
From the time they were ~ 12 months or so and I stopped nursing, he did all MOTN wake ups. He makes dinner most nights.
And he has a really good job and treats me like a queen. It perplexes me how I ended up with a man like this. I used to assume most men were the same.
Anonymous wrote:^ it shows the type of relationship kids SHOULD see. Not the dysfunctional mom at home and dad not doing anything at home that some Neanderthal men want to perpetuate for ego sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're split basically 50/50 (Him: Fed 190k, me (woman) private sector: 200k) so this was basically never a question. Homeboy likes his vacations and fancy shoes, which is do-able on a dual-income and impossible on his alone. Luckily, he chose someone raised by a SAHM who was brought up to always work!
My husband never thought this way.
We made similar salaries when we met in our mid 20s. Soon after, he went independent and his salary tripled. I stayed with the Feds, but always have loved my job. I had great flexibility and eventually full-time WAH when my firstborn turned 1.
He makes anywhere from $350-500k/depending on project. I make $190k.
It’s been great. And my job allowed for the stable health benefits.
We created our wealth, real estate portfolio together. 22 years into marriage, very proud of what we ha e created and that my boys see a mom working in a STEM field and a dad that is involved in family life- helps cook, clean, etc. actually, he’s better at household chores.